Kirkwood is credited with introducing University of Idaho students to modernist techniques and concepts.[3] Her work is held in the collection of the University of Idaho and Portland Art Museum.
A number of her commissioned portraits hang at the University of Idaho.[1] A 1980 painting titled Kate is in the collections at the Portland Art Museum in Portland, Oregon.[5]
There is a scholarship in her name at the University of Idaho.[6] The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon retains a 1930 painting in its archives of Adam and Eve, produced as part of Kirkwood's MFA degree.
Work
Agricultural Science Building Mural
"...nothing could deter Assistant Professor Mary Kirkwood of Art as she sat on a scaffold day after day, painting a mural in the building's lobby. The mural depicted the State's varied types of agriculture, from wheat farming on the rolling Palouse Hills to row-cropping on the level, irrigated Snake River Plain."[7][8]
^Newby, Rick (2004). The Rocky Mountain Region: The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures. Greenwood. ISBN978-0313328176.
^Benton, Mary Clay (June 1928). "1928 Oregana". University of Oregon Special Collections & University Archives, Ld4368 .O7 1928. University of Oregon. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
^"Kate". www.portlandartmuseum.us. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
^"Financial Aid & Scholarships". College & Department University of Idaho Scholarships & Financial Aid. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
^Gibbs, Rafe (1962). Beacon for Mountain and Plain. Caldwell, ID: Caxton Printers. p. 324.
^Trenton, Patricia (1995). Independent Spirits: Women Painters of the American West, 1890-1945. University of California Press. ISBN978-0520202030.